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Paper ID #12310
CA2VES, an NSF Regional Center, Enhancing the Engineering and Techni-cian Education Pipeline
Dr. Kristin Kelly Frady, Clemson University
Dr. Kris Frady is the Director of Operations for the Clemson University Center for Workforce Devel-opment. Additionally, she has earned experience in the corporate sector working with Blackbaud Inc.,designing and delivering professional training seminars in online, blended, and live environments. Shealso has experience in the educational sector in both live and online environments as an adjunct instruc-tor in computer technology for Greenville Technical College and as a Career and Technology Educationteacher.
Kris earned a B.S. in Management from Clemson University, a Masters of Arts in Teaching in BusinessEducation from the University of South Carolina, and an Ed.D. in Curriculum and Instruction with anemphasis in Educational Technology and online learning from the University of Florida.
Her research interests include implementation of digital learning solutions in technical and vocationaleducation, development of career pathways utilizing stackable certificates, educator professional develop-ment in communities of practice, and analysis of economic development and industry factors impactingeducation and workforce development.
She is a licensed South Carolina Educator and serves on various boards to assist with implementation ofworkforce development is a statewide model including: the Anderson, Oconee, Pickens Showcase board,the technical college led Partnership for Academic and Career Education, Oconee County Work ReadyCommunity Board of Advisors, and Pickens Career and Technology Center Advisory Board.
In over 10 years in development of educational and training materials Kris has designed and deliveredprofessional development and training courses and seminars for 501-c3 organizations across the UnitedStates. Her experience as a professional educator has supported her development of educational resources,knowledge of P-12 and technical college systems and needs, and passion for educating youth. In her roleas Director of Operations for the Center for Workforce Development she has guided development andassessment of innovative online educational material and the integration of digital learning and visualiza-tion tools. She has been part of a team involved in disseminating those results and models throughoutnumerous national conferences and peer reviewed conference papers. Finally, as part of an overall teamshe has worked to develop a system wide support network consisting of all 16 South Carolina technicalcolleges, state funded organizations, National Science Foundation Advanced Technological EducationCenters across the United States, P-12 schools and districts across South Carolina, and many manufactur-ing industry partners to create pathways and resources for supporting advanced manufacturing advocacyand opportunities impacting employability and economic development across the Southeast.
Dr. Kapil Chalil Madathil, Clemson UniversityDr. Anand K. Gramopadhye, Clemson UniversityDr. Ben Perry Dillard IIIDr. Hope Epps Rivers, SC Technical College System
Hope E. Rivers is the Vice President for Academic and Student Affairs. She holds a Doctor of Philosophyin Educational Administration degree from the University of South Carolina (USC). Dr. Rivers is respon-sible for promoting communication and collaboration between the state Technical College System Officeand the Vice Presidents of Academic and Student Affairs, Deans, and Directors at the 16 technical andcommunity colleges in all areas related to curriculum and instruction, student services, and research. Shealso serves as the primary technical college system liaison to the SC Commission on Higher Education,certification boards, and a diverse group of agencies designed to address the educational and workforceneeds in the state. Additionally, Dr. Rivers is the principal administrator and manager of several federaland state grants, which are distributed to the technical and community colleges across the state. Her 20-years of higher education experience provide a wealth of knowledge to draw from for a host of state-wideinitiatives.
c©American Society for Engineering Education, 2015
Page 26.319.1
CA2VES, an NSF Regional Center, Enhancing the Talent Pipeline
to Support the Advanced Manufacturing Industry
Introduction
The Ready to Work: Job-Driven Training and American Opportunity report identified
three major problems in our employment and education system: (1) Employers can’t find
enough skilled workers to hire for in-demand jobs they must fill to grow their businesses; (2)
Education and training programs need better information on what skills those in-demand jobs
require; and (3) Hard-working Americans, whether studying, looking for work, or wanting better
career paths, often aren’t sure what education to pursue and whether jobs will be waiting when
they finish.1 The Center for Aviation and Automotive Technology Education using Virtual E-
Schools (CA2VES) is an innovative regional center aiming to address these three major
problems, and many additional challenges that have plagued workforce development projects.
The Center for Aviation and Automotive Technology Education using Virtual E-Schools
(CA2VES), located at Clemson University in South Carolina, serves as a state, regional, and
national resource for 2-year college e-learning research, professional development, and advanced
curriculum based on the latest neuroscience principles, to help educate and prepare a sustainable,
multi-skilled technological workforce for manufacturing technician and engineering technology
careers. With its current regional center grant from the National Science Foundation Advanced
Technological Education (NSF ATE) program, CA2VES continues to identify and meet the
needs of 2-year college technological education faculty and students alike, and in particular,
helps to reach and serve underrepresented students, with innovative e-learning research,
recruitment and curriculum applications.
CA2VES is a strong, vibrant, proactive partnership between Clemson University and the
Clemson University Center for Workforce Development; the SC ATE National Center of
Excellence; Florence-Darlington Technical College; Greenville Technical College; and Trident
Technical College. Additionally, collaborative partners include NSF ATE Centers; all sixteen
South Carolina 2-year colleges and their high school partners; and the South Carolina automotive
and aviation industry. Although headquartered at Clemson, the primary focus of CA2VES is
supporting technological education in 2-year colleges through digital learning tools. The 2-year
colleges who partner with CA2VES work to create products that improve the access to, and
quality and capacity of, associate degree technology programs and certificates to educate an
advanced manufacturing, aviation, and automotive manufacturing workforce.
CA2VES distinctive approach has yielded many exciting deliverables and results that may be
immediately utilized by 2-year college faculty and administrators in advanced manufacturing and
engineering technology programs.
(1) Creation of an innovative, high-impact personalized digital learning curriculum model for
educating 2-year college students and industry employees in advanced manufacturing
(over 30 virtual reality tools and simulations and over 80 advanced e-learning modules,
developed by CA2VES, are being integrated into technological education programs
nationwide).
Page 26.319.2
(2) Development of recruiting and pathway development resources to attract and retain
underrepresented groups to advanced manufacturing career pathways and 2-year college
technological education programs (development and distribution of e-learning lessons,
videos and tools in K-12 classrooms, and incorporation of industry partnerships in
multiple large scale recruitment campaigns).
(3) Broad dissemination and development of the virtual school as a standard pedagogical tool
(development of methodology to evaluate pedagogical effectiveness and analysis of
utilization of digital learning tools to determine impact).
(4) Creation of a model of a national collaborative venture among universities, NSF ATE
Centers and Projects, 2-year colleges, high schools, and key industries (utilization of
ATE Centers and Projects nationwide to support digital learning tool distribution and
dissemination; partnership and program implementation with over 80 educational
institutions – 2-year colleges, K-12, 4-year universities and educational organizations,
over 70 industry partners and over 15 community based and governmental agencies).
CA2VES, an educational program unlike any other in the US and with the full backing of key
industry employers, federal government agencies, state workforce departments, and secondary
and post-secondary educational institutions, is providing sustainable resources to support the
vital role played by 2-year programs in the engineering and technological education pipeline.
A Workforce Development Solution Designed to Support Economic Development Needs
A Sector Based Strategy
Despite its decline in the late1990s and early 2000s, the advanced manufacturing sector plays
a critical role in the US economy contributing $2.09 billion; a financial impact which has risen
steadily since 2009 and presently accounts for 12 percent of gross domestic product.2 Jobs in
advanced manufacturing have also experienced steady growth during this period of time where
current estimates suggest that over 12 million Americans (approximately nine percent of the
workforce) are directly employed in manufacturing.3 Interestingly, the manufacturing sector
employs, on average, a higher number of workers without a college degree than the overall
economy; almost 11 percent more than similar workers in the rest of the economy in 2012-2013.4
However, as advanced manufacturing jobs become increasingly technologically advanced the
need for a more highly qualified and educated workforce has begun to emerge where the percent
of manufacturing employment by educational attainment has seen a steady increase in the need
for some college or a college degree.5
In the recently released White House report, Accelerating US Advanced Manufacturing, it is
stated that the US manufacturing sector draws its strength from a “multitude of tightly linked
capabilities contributed by the private sector, academia, and labor” and as manufacturing grows
and strengthens in the United States, a broad public-private coalition has emerged in support of
American manufacturing.6 Given these factors plus present and projected growth of the
advanced manufacturing sector, CA2VES continues to develop solutions and strategies which
have a primary focus on workforce development solutions targeted at supporting employment
needs of advanced manufacturing industries specifically automotive and aviation manufacturers. Page 26.319.3
Further, sector-based initiatives have been found to serve as successful avenues for establishing
greater understanding and better relationships between workforce practitioners and employers.7
Establishing Regional Partnerships to form Workforce Development Infrastructure
To be certain, many institutions and organizations in the US are implementing programs
that have innovative and effective elements. But their success is often thwarted by being overly
complex, fragmented or lacking in transparency.8,
9,
10
They are also challenged by limited
employer engagement, inconsistent delivery of training and education, a disconnect between
secondary education and the labor market, challenges in the 2-year college system, inefficiency,
and increased difficulty of the public and employers’ understanding and accessing workforce
development programs.11
Further, funding of workforce development initiatives, in many cases,
is heavily reliant on federal funding sources12
which have declined in recent years, imposing
structural limitations. In order to meet the overwhelming human capital demands of the US
today and in the future, regional workforce development initiatives “must act strategically to
establish partnerships and leverage resources that will enable them to meet the increasingly
complex employment and skill needs of jobseekers, employers, and their regional economies in
the future.”13
Indeed, regional and community-based workforce development initiatives are being
recognized as increasingly appropriate in addressing workforce development challenges.14
Regional are better than local efforts at identifying and filling skills gaps and aligning workforce
systems.15
The regional initiatives experiencing the greatest successes have created institutional
collaborations, which focus on building greater public-private collaboration and cooperation.16
Many successful examples of regional collaborative programs have been implemented however,
best practices emerging from these initiatives have not been widely disseminated, are not often
backed by solid evidence and typically do not extend to other regions which may benefit.17
Another challenge in the field of workforce development stems from a lack of common, agreed
upon definitions, outcomes, measures and benchmarks.
The Ready to Work: Job-Driven Training and American Opportunity report “emphasized
the importance of looking beyond our federal programs and agencies for answers and best
practices.” Workforce development programs must begin working together across county and
state lines, create common visions and understanding, reduce redundancy of effort leverage
resources from both private and public sources. A new national learning exchange model must
emerge to facilitate leaders in the workforce development field in innovation of new approaches,
implementation of an evidence-based approach to establish and disseminate effective practices
and scaling or replicating promising models to meet more widespread adoption.18
CA2VES aims
to embody such a model and through its distinctive approach has had the ability to not only
impact learning and curriculum but also has established regional partnerships with outcomes
reflective this learning exchange model.
Page 26.319.4
The CA2VES Approach
(1) Innovative, high-impact personalized digital learning curriculum
According to a 2012 study produced by Deloitte LLP approximately 600,000 skilled
manufacturing jobs are going unfilled due to a skills gap between workforce requirements and
labor market ability.19
An aging workforce further compounds this issue where projections
show that in 2030 more than 20 percent of the workforce will be over 65 compared to 13 percent
in 2010 and 9.8 percent in 1970.20
This means that manufacturing employers are not only
combating current labor shortages but they are also deeply concerned about an impending labor
shortage crisis caused by a “graying” workforce. Addressing this skills gap is a national priority
where industry leaders have reported that if unresolved could compromise their ability to stay
competitive.21
At this crucial juncture, it is incumbent upon educational institutions and
workforce development initiatives to find innovative approaches to skill-up the current labor
force while also creating a pipeline of highly-skilled next generation manufacturing technicians
and engineers.
An obstacle that the manufacturing and A2 programs at 2-year colleges face is attracting
young, more technology-oriented students. Additionally, these schools are limited by funding,
availability of high technology resources, and are typically restricted by an infrastructure which
was initially designed to support the use of traditional face-to-face educational methodology.
Further, despite the development of numerous technology-based, education and workforce
preparedness tools; opportunities for technical education students to utilize these tools and
engage in contextual learning are still emerging. CA2VES, a state-of-the-art virtual e-school
center, seeks to alleviate these pressures by leveraging statewide and other existing NSF ATE
center expertise to offer a distinctive solution to these challenges through implementation of a
technologically infused infrastructure delivering e-learning in a virtual classroom environment.
Page 26.319.5
Figure 1. Instructional materials
Digital learning solutions developed by CA2VES’ include high-impact, hands-on virtual
reality and 3D visualizations and also focus on engaging, computer enhanced teaching
techniques, and hands-on laboratory experiences; the combination of which offers student-
centered, contextual, authentic learning experiences (see Figure 1). It is difficult to make real-
world learning experiences widely available in the classroom to students because of
parameterization issues (too many variables to manipulate) and the availability and cost of
equipment and machinery. The flexibility inherent in e-learning and virtual classrooms offers
CA2VES new avenues to not only attract more technology-oriented students but also capacity to
reach new students in locations (including areas lacking geographical access to necessary
education). Further, the educational design of the digital learning tools helps the learner to
develop both basic and critical thinking skills, reduce learning time and immerse the learner in an
environment that would be otherwise unavailable. Previous studies22,23
have proven that highly
interactive learner-centric education experiences have results in significant gains in student
learning, retention, reinforcement and knowledge transfer. Finally, faster transfer of knowledge
and greater retention are facilitated by effective and timely feedback and the opportunity to
practice a new skill.
CA2VES is also integrating technology to address challenges such as equipment
limitations, class size, and student scheduling constraints. Much of the learning and skills
development in traditional technological education programs takes place through hands-on
laboratory experiences. We have developed virtual reality tools to make these lab experiences
more accessible. While these tools are not intended to completely replace a lab experience, they
provide students with the opportunity to spend more time practicing with equipment and
experiencing simulated industrial environments so they are more successful during labs.
Page 26.319.6
CA2VES has strived to implement the learnings from existing research in each of its over 30
virtual reality simulations which include a variety of precision measurement tools, basic
electricity measurement tools, computer numerical control (CNC) machines, grinding machines,
a tool box and a fully stereoscopic turbine engine, gas combustion engine and brake system.
CA2VES has also developed fully immersive environments where a user can enter a factory
(modeled after the Greer, South Carolina BMW facility) and perform a safety audit tagging any
detected violations.
Additionally, CA2VES has developed over 50 advanced e-learning modules which
provide wraparound curricula to more seamlessly incorporate the virtual reality into the student
learning process. These modules include outlines, e-text, assessment guides, presentations files,
and other pedagogically designed educational support resources. These models have been
designed in courses and include fresh innovative ways to teach Metrology, Safety,
Manufacturing Production, Quality, Maintenance, Basic Electricity, Workforce Fundamentals
(soft skills), and several other areas.
The virtual reality simulations and e-learning modules are sustained by academic,
technical, and engineering knowledge from across the states 2-year colleges, Clemson
University, CU-ICAR (International Center for Automotive Research) and leading industries
(BMW, Michelin, Honda, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, and GE Aviation). CA2VES seeks to
address the shortage of automotive and aviation technicians through the development and
implementation of an advanced, high-tech pedagogical approach designed to enhance and
increase the capacity of 2-year colleges and to increase the number of highly skilled graduates in
a more cost-effective way.
(2) Technological Education Recruitment and Pathway Development
CA2VES is committed to creating future technicians, engineers and scientists who can be
productive in a global economy. The combination of pathway development and recruitment
focused programs have experienced success in providing a number of experiential learning
opportunities that require students to transfer academic knowledge and experience from the
classroom to real-world work environments. Building innovative career pathways to support
technological education careers helps to provide greater economic growth and development in
manufacturing and A2 industries throughout the region. CA
2VES employs a two pronged
approach to impact recruitment and career development: (1) support of educational pathway
development and (2) utilization of K-12 STEM initiatives to engage the next generation of
students and workers in advanced manufacturing learning and skill development. Through
pathway development programs CA2VES is able to work with local 2-year colleges to develop a
pipeline of next generation technicians with the capacity to positively impact the region’s
growing economy.
By 2018, it is projected that over 40 percent of advanced manufacturing jobs will require
post-secondary education.24
Post-secondary education may include industry recognized
certification, associate’s degrees, bachelor’s degrees or beyond where any post-secondary
attainment may have the ability to significantly impact an individual’s earning ability.25
Creation
of educational pathways enabling students, veterans, adults and incumbent workers to have both
Page 26.319.7
access to and a seamless transition between various types of post-secondary educational
attainment is vital to increasing overall educational attainment throughout the region. Pathway
development may include stackable certificates, creative ways to address credentials, innovative
articulation programs, increasing industry’s role in curriculum development and communication
and strategic planning across educational and workforce entities system wide. Based on results
from similar initiatives in other countries, creation of high-quality pathways could be the single
most important strategy for increasing post-secondary degree or credential attainment.26
To
support development of an advanced manufacturing pathway throughout the region CA2VES is
creating e-modules which will aid learners in attainment of an industry recognized credential,
creating Memorandums of Understanding with 2-year colleges outlining first steps in creation of
seamless transfer opportunities, and providing opportunities for key educational stakeholders to
discuss, collaborate, and delve deeper into creative articulation solutions.
CA2VES has also developed expertise utilizing K-12 STEM education as an area to
expose students to careers and educational pathways in advanced manufacturing. Recently
CA2VES joined public funds with over $4 million in private funds from Duke Energy
Foundation to create and support new technology labs and equipment, develop new curriculum,
support collaborations among multiple 2-year colleges, develop summer camps for recruitment
and provide scholarships supporting STEM majors. Implementation of this entire initiative
impacted over 60 percent of South Carolina’s K-12 school districts, over 70 percent of South
Carolina 2-year colleges, five 4-year institutions and numerous STEM and community and non-
profit organizations. Working to create manufacturing career exposure opportunities through
STEM education is important because student, parent, and teacher perceptions of manufacturing
facilities bear little resemblance to the modern, high-technology facilities across the United
States. In order to meet the growing workforce demand (of current facilities and facilities that
the nation may hope to attract) it is imperative that students and parents be educated of these
career opportunities provided with educational resources, training, and immersion experiences to
encourage them to consider these growing employment opportunities. To address this, CA2VES
has engineered a robust digital learning curriculum gathering input from leading advanced
manufacturing employers aimed at not only generating greater exposure to these lucrative and
needed careers but also to beginning to address the skills gap identified by these employers. This
digital learning curriculum has been implemented across the K-12 spectrum as the following
programs:
Elementary school (focusing on Exposure): Introduction to jet turbine engines and
precision measurement with virtual reality Vernier Calipers through the eyes of CA2VES
mascot, Mr. Beetle
Middle school (focusing on Exploration): Leadership in implementation of the Business
and Industry Showcase, impacting around 5,500 8th grade students annually, in
curriculum development, planning, and implementation of a manufacturing career
exploration immersion experience
High school (focusing on Immersion): Development of digital learning tools, lesson
plans, creation of Workforce TV video, and piloting of CA2VES developed industry
recognized certification materials with 10th graders in a career center
Additionally, CA2VES has supported STEM guidance counselor and career counselor events and
activities while also hosting national conference tracks, regional workshops webinars and onsite
training for K-12 teachers and guidance and career counselors. Finally, CA2VES has utilized
Page 26.319.8
industry partnerships to develop and implement program-specific recruitment activities: two
Professional Development Educator Forums (over 150 educators and over 20 industry
representatives participated); various workshops (over 60% of SC school districts participated);
Workforce TV videos (GE, BMW, Michelin, Boeing and Fluor partnered to develop); a national
conference track focused on technological education (over 300 attended the conference, 50 in the
CA2VES/CUCWD track); and multiple career fairs and activities partnering with over 40 South
Carolina businesses. Through STEM career pathways, recruitment events, student activities and
engagement, and professional development opportunities; CA2VES is developing a pipeline of
next generation of technicians, scientists and engineers with the capacity to positively impact the
growing economy.
(3) Broad Dissemination of Advanced Technology Digital Learning Tools
In order to maximize the impact of CA2VES research and development, CA
2VES has
also implemented a wide dissemination plan to leverage its recognized and proven work to date.
Additionally CA2VES has viewed dissemination as an opportunity to promote the profile of the
Center and strengthen its research capacity and reach. Dissemination efforts of the Center are
implemented in four strategic areas:
(1) Partnerships: CA2VES leverages partnerships and networking with a variety
of partners and stakeholders system wide including those within the NSF ATE
program, educational institutions ranging from K-12 to 2-year colleges to 4-
year universities, dedicated business partners, professional associations and
academic organizations, and non-profit and community organizations. This
network of partners is not only key to dissemination of findings and products
produced by CA2VES; but are also CA
2VES key to success, sustainability and
relevance within the region.
(2) Events: CA2VES shares its findings and resources through multiple events
sponsored throughout the year. The Center holds workshops, seminars,
webinars and has even sponsored a Workforce Development track in a
national conference. These events are an opportunity to not only disseminate
resources but also to gather feedback, make new partnerships and strengthen
existing partnerships. These events focus on best practices in implementation
of digital learning tool and virtual reality resources, educator professional
development, connecting local industry with schools and information about
the strength and vibrancy of advanced manufacturing careers throughout the
region.
(3) Publications and Presentations: CA2VES is active in promoting and
developing a community of scholars in virtual reality and digital learning to
support technological education in advanced manufacturing. The researchers
at the Center have engaged in a variety of academic dissemination efforts
including presenting at numerous state and national level conferences,
publications in peer-reviewed journals, and periodic press releases and op-ed
articles in local and national media sources. Additionally, CA2VES produces
and distributes a quarterly newsletter and intermittent white papers and reports
on findings from events and special research projects. Page 26.319.9
(4) Online Dissemination: All curricula digital learning materials created by
CA2VES are distributed to stakeholders via an online portal
www.educateworkforce.com created by CA2VES and Clemson University
Center for Workforce Development staff. Additionally, ATE Central
(https://atecentral.net/) is also a repository where some materials from the
Center are archived and may be accessed.
CA2VES has a vision for broad implementation and dissemination of manufacturing
transportation e-learning tools nationwide utilizing NSF ATE Center partners and its unique
learning platform www.educateworkforce.com (see Figure 2). The National Academy of
Engineering (NAE) has also recognized dissemination of e-learning tools to 2-year colleges to
support technical of STEM education to be of the highest priority.27
Educateworkforce.com is a
learning solution portal offered with partnering technical colleges to help successfully blend
powerful online and digital solutions into their existing courses. This portal is the first of its kind
specifically built for and tailored to the unique needs of 2-year and technical education and will
consist of both basic and advanced courses focusing on the needs of technician students and will
provide a selection of courses.
This site is an ideal way to develop and refine novel online learning experiences.
Students may have access to self-paced learning tools or faculty may choose to integrate
modules, iBooks, brief video lectures, virtual reality simulations, and instant feedback
assessments into their existing courses. Moreover, the site will be able to offer a robust catalog
of state-of-the-art materials and digital learning resources through the integration of courses
developed by integral partners including 2-year colleges from the Department of Labor Trade
Adjustment Assistance Community College and Career Training grant program, NSF ATE
centers and programs nationwide, and many others. NSF ATE Center partners nationwide are
also assisting in introducing and distributing digital learning tools and information about
Educateworkforce.com to 2-year colleges and technological education programs throughout the
Southeast.
The Educateworkforce.com platform was designed by multiple instructional design,
usability, network and computing experts to include many research tested learning features. The
platform represents a new approach to learning seamlessly integrating Universal Design for
Learning (UDL) principles for curriculum development to give all individuals equal opportunity
to learn. The platform embraces leading neuroscience research and designed to meet the needs
of three primary brain networks: (1) recognition networks, (2) strategic networks, and (3)
affective networks.
Page 26.319.10
Figure 2. EducateWorkforce Platform
(4) A model of a national collaborative venture
Through its efforts, CA2VES has created a model of a national collaborative venture among
universities, NSF ATE Centers and Projects, 2-year colleges, high schools, and key industries
(utilization of ATE Centers and Projects nationwide support digital learning tool distribution and
dissemination; partnership and program implementation with over 80 educational institutions –
2-year colleges, K-12, 4-year universities and educational organizations, over 70 industry
partners and over 15 community based and governmental agencies). Through this immense
network of partners, CA2VES has established itself as a leader in workforce development in the
region and in March 2014 was asked to lead and host a roundtable discussion for US Secretary of
Commerce Penny Pritzker. The roundtable discussion included topics on how to develop a well-
qualified workforce, how workforce development systems and employers ensure education leads
to an in-demand job, and continuation of educational alignment with the region’s economic
growth. In a CNBC interview following the visit, Secretary Pritzker said, “I was in South
Carolina this week…at a plant that’s working with Clemson University, the local technical
colleges and the local businesses to help workers get the skills they need. And what you see is
that kind of effort is extremely useful and valued not just by the worker but also by the
businesses.” This roundtable and its results embody the mission and charge of CA2VES and
have further elevated the Center’s leadership role in the field of workforce development.
Public-Private Partnerships Creating Next Generation Technicians
In today’s shrinking federal and state funding environment it is becoming increasingly
necessary for a sustainable NSF ATE Center or project to shift the paradigm from one engaged
primarily with public funding to one which engages not only private funding but also new and
diverse funding sources. CA2VES has experienced much success through its focus on
identifying synergies between NSF ATE priorities and emerging non-public funding
opportunities. The emerging opportunities include exploring private funding working with
corporate foundations and redesigning the business model of an ATE Center or project to focus
on new and diverse revenue opportunities.
Page 26.319.11
With over $11 million in public-private funding since 2011, CA2VES supports education,
training, and workforce initiatives and seeks to improve manufacturing and industry
competitiveness. CA2VES has an established local and national capacity through management
of CA2VES, acting as the lead educational consultant on three Department of Labor Trade
Adjustment Assistance Community College and Career Training Grant Program – DOL
TAACCCT), managing statewide workforce development foundation implementation for various
private industries, and acting as the lead organization for an Economic Development
Administration Make it in America consortium. Also, CA2VES has expertise in administering,
implementing, and attracting private sector investments. This is evidenced by a successful
history of public-private collaboration on similar projects. The Center for Workforce
Development and CA2VES recently managed $4.11 million dollar foundation agreement with the
Duke Energy Foundation to implement economic development focused workforce development
initiatives across the state of South Carolina. A key component of all of the funding
opportunities that CA2VES has leveraged is the complementary missions, programs and foci
across deliverables. This complementary perspective has enabled each individual program to
become part of a larger strategic initiative thereby empowering each to have greater impact,
support and sustainability. Through leveraging and linking public and private funds, CA2VES
has been able to exponentially increase its impact in advanced manufacturing technological
education throughout the region.
Sustainability
The CA2VES funding model identifies key activities, stakeholders, a multi-layered
framework for research and planning for long-term sustainability, and a detailed matrix on
utilization of resources.28
The matrix focuses on prioritizing activities based on their
classification as positive or negative financial return and market growth, as compared to high or
low benefit, social impact or market share. Within each of these categories, strategies such as
maintaining, cutting, cautious expansion, or careful nurturing, can help direct the use of funds so
as to maximize the allocation of financial resources.
To help sustain its work and fulfill its mission into the future, CA2VES maintains a
comprehensive portfolio of expertise, resources, and services readily available to colleagues and
partners in education, government, and industry. CA2VES builds on this base as it eventually
prepares to transition into a National Resource Center for the ATE community. Through its
strategic and sustainability planning efforts, CA2VES will concurrently: 1) improve the
effectiveness of collaborative interactions with multiple stakeholder groups (e.g., NSF ATE
Centers and projects, educational organizations and schools, industry, government agencies,
regional board partnerships and their affiliated representation, and Clemson University
partnerships); 2) develop funding for and extend the research base and long-term impact of
CA2VES; and 3) develop new and diverse funding sources via consulting services to education
and industry partners interested in implementing VR, E-Schools, or digital teaching and learning
materials in online and hybrid environments.
Page 26.319.12
Summary
In order to create a strong U.S. manufacturing and industry sector and make the United
States a magnet for new jobs and manufacturing, businesses and universities must explore unique
ways to partner to leverage public-private resources for turning strategic regions into global
centers of high-tech jobs. An educated, skilled and innovative workforce is vital to
manufacturers’ success and sustainability and education must be robust and accessible to
encourage industry to locate and expand throughout strategic regions. Strong, collaborative ties
between educational entities and manufacturers must be paired with a targeted focus on talent
pipeline development, education and training in order for companies to capitalize on the research
and resources emerging from initiatives such as CA2VES. In future initiatives, CA
2VES will
focus on utilizing and better implementing an established system-wide model of workforce
development to create a pathway between education and industry enabling the latest training
methodologies and technologies to support and extend their workforce quality and productivity
targets.
For a large scale endeavor to be successful for implementing a workforce development
methodology, selection of an established model from an organization having experience
implementing this model is critical to ensure maximize impact. CA2VES has not only created
and established such a system-wide model in a statewide application but has also established a
sustainable infrastructure to support this model. Through regional education and professional
development, the CA2VES model can be taught and replicated to support workforce
development in other regions.
1 White House. (2014). Ready to Work: Job-Driven Training and American Opportunity. Washington, DC:
Retrieved from http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/docs/skills_report.pdf. 2 Bureau of Economic Analysis. (2014). Industry Economic Accounts.
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4 Scott, R.E. (2015). The Manufacturing Footprint and the Importance of US Manufacturing Jobs. Washington, DC:
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